This case (Gunfleet Sands Limited and others v HMRC) involves expenditure by four subsidiaries of Orsted A/S which were involved in developing UK offshore windfarms. HMRC had accepted that the turbines and cabling costs themselves qualified, but disagreed on the treatment of various ancillary studies, with a total cost of nearly £50 million. The First-tier Tribunal (FTT) considered two main issues relating to capital allowances: firstly, whether the windfarms should be viewed as one item of plant (‘the generation assets’) or on a component-by-component basis, and secondly, whether the studies qualified as being ‘on the provision of’ plant and machinery under section 11 of the Capital Allowances Act 2001 (CAA2001). These factors have wider application for similar expenditure incurred on other asset types.
In this judgment the FTT first tackled whether the windfarms should be viewed together as single items of plant or whether the turbines, cables, substations etc. should be looked at individually. In deciding this issue, the FTT looked primarily to Cole Brothers and Barclay Curle and divined the principle that individual components ‘directed towards a single purpose’ could be treated as a single asset. In this case, the FTT described the windfarm as akin to a power station and determined that, as a whole, it was directed towards the generation of electricity from wind, and therefore should be considered a single item of plant.
The next question was whether preliminary studies qualify as being ‘on the provision of’ the plant. Three categories were identified:
- Studies proposing no mitigations and therefore having no impact on the design/construction of the assets;
- Studies impacting the design/construction but the changes proposed were not ‘necessary’ (e.g. they related to the type of lighting on the wind turbines); and
- Studies impacting the design/construction in a way that impacted the operational ability or effectiveness.